2016年4月19日星期二

Hope for Reversing Type 2 Diabetes

Many experts believe Type 2 diabetes is an incurable disease that gets worse with time. But new research raises the tantalizing possibility that drastic changes in diet may reverse the disease in some people.
Recently, a small clinical trial in England studied the effects of a strict liquid diet on 30 people who had lived with Type 2 diabetes for up to 23 years. Nearly half of those studied had a remission that lasted six months after the diet was over. While the study was small, the finding offers hope to millions who have been told they must live with the intractable disease.
“This is a radical change in our understanding of Type 2 diabetes,” said Dr. Roy Taylor, a professor at Newcastle University in England and the study’s senior author. “If we can get across the message that ‘yes, this is a reversible disease — that you will have no more diabetes medications, no more sitting in doctors’ rooms, no more excess health charges’ — that is enormously motivating.”
It is not the first time that people have reversed type 2 diabetes by losing a lot of weight shortly after a diagnosis. Studies have also shown that obese individuals who have bariatric surgery frequently see the condition vanish even before they lose very much weight.
But the new study, published in Diabetes Care, proved the reversal after diet can persist for at least half a year as long as patients keep weight off, and can occur in people who have had the disease for many years.
The researchers followed the participants after they had completed an eight-week low-calorie-milkshake diet and returned to normal eating. Six months later, those who had gone into remission immediately after the diet were still diabetes-free. Though most of those who reversed the disease had had it for less than four years, some had been diabetic for more than eight years.
When Allan Tutty, 57, learned five years ago that he had Type 2 diabetes, he asked health care providers if there was a cure. “It was a case of, look, you’ve got it, deal with it, there’s no cure,” said Mr. Tutty, who manages a home for people with brain injuries in Newcastle.
Later, Mr. Tutty spotted a notice recruiting volunteers for a diabetes study that asked, “Would you like the opportunity to reverse your condition?”
Mr. Tutty said he jumped at the chance, becoming one of 30 men and women ages 25 to 80 to sign up. Mr. Tutty was one of 13 participants whose fasting plasma glucose dropped, and during the six-month follow-up remained below the seven millimole per liter (or 126 milligrams per deciliter) that defines diabetes. Although Mr. Tutty completed the study nearly three years ago, his fasting blood sugars continue to range from 5.2 to 5.6 mmol/L, he said.
Type 2 diabetes develops when the body cannot use insulin properly or make enough insulin, so the body cannot properly use or store glucose (a form of sugar) and sugar backs up into the bloodstream, raising blood sugar levels. In the United States, some 8.9 percent of adults 20 and older have been found to have diabetes, and health officials estimate that another 3.5 percent have undiagnosed diabetes.
Although no one knows exactly why the diet appeared to reverse diabetes, Dr. Taylor said the explanation may be related to how the body stores fat. Excess fat in the liver can spill into the pancreas, inhibiting insulin secretion and the liver’s response to insulin, resulting in insulin resistance and diabetes.
Going on a very-low-calorie diet may allow the body to use up fat from the liver, causing fat levels to drop in the pancreas as well. That “wakes up” the insulin-producing cells in the pancreas, normalizing blood glucose levels.
While some previous studies have shown that blood sugars can normalize after significant weight loss, endocrinologists said they were impressed by the persistence of the lower blood sugar levels for months after the diet.
“Decreasing caloric intake for any reason brings with it a rapid improvement in glucose control,” said Dr. Robert Lash, the chairman of the Endocrine Society’s clinical affairs committee and a professor of internal medicine at the University of Michigan. “What’s exciting here is that the improvements in glucose control persisted when the participants went back to eating a diet with a normal number of calories.”
While the research suggests the potential for a cure, questions remain about how long the effect will last and whether it can work for the typical patient with diabetes.
“It’s definitely doable,” said Dr. George King, the chief scientific officer at Joslin Diabetes Center and a professor at Harvard Medical School. The question, he said, is: Can people maintain the weight loss and “continue to have this reversal for many, many years?”
“That is the difficult part,” he added.
Dr. King said that even short-term remission would reduce or put off some of the serious complications associated with diabetes, like nerve damage, kidney damage, loss of vision, heart attacks and strokes. Yet structured weight loss programs are expensive and often not covered by insurance, and physicians — who are often not well-versed in nutrition — may not take the time to counsel patients about diet, Dr. King said.
The participants in the Newcastle trial, who ranged from overweight to extremely obese, were told to stop their diabetes medications and start a 600- to 700-calorie-a-day diet, consisting of three diet milkshakes a day at mealtimes and half a pound of nonstarchy vegetables a day.
Mr. Tutty, who weighed about 213 pounds before the trial, lost a little more than 30 pounds, the average weight loss in the trial. The people in the study most likely to respond to the treatment were in their early 50s on average and younger than the nonresponders, and they had had diabetes for fewer years. The responders were also healthier before the trial: They had been taking fewer medications than nonresponders, had lower fasting glucose and hemoglobin A1c before the trial, and had higher baseline serum insulin levels. Three of those who went into remission had lived with diabetes for more than eight years.
Many of the responders are still in the prediabetes zone and at risk for developing diabetes, Dr. Taylor said. “It’s not fair to say they were completely normalized, but they’re at a level of blood sugar where we don’t expect to see the serious complications associated with diabetes,” he said. “That’s why it’s such good news.”
The big challenge for dieters was returning to normal eating, and trial participants received intensive counseling from a researcher on the team about how to eat after ending the liquid diet, Dr. Taylor said.
“They would describe going back to the kitchen and almost having a panic attack,” he said. “We used that as an opportunity to instill new habits, and were very directive about how much to cook and how much to eat.”

Higher B.M.I. in Teenagers Tied to Heart Risks Later

Higher body mass index in adolescence, even in the normal range, is tied to an increased risk for cardiovascular disease in adulthood, according to a new study.
Researchers used data on 2.3 million Israeli men and women who underwent medical evaluations for military service at age 17 from 1967 through 2010. Over the 40 years of follow-up, there were 2,918 deaths from cardiovascular causes, about half of them from coronary heart disease. The study is in The New England Journal of Medicine.
Compared to 17-year-olds with B.M.I. in the 5th to 24th percentile (corresponding to a median B.M.I. of about 18.9), those in the 25th to 49th percentile (B.M.I. 20.6) had a small increased risk for coronary heart disease in adulthood. But those in the 50th to 74th percentile (B.M.I. 22.2) had a 49 percent increased risk, and those in the 75th to 84th percentile (B.M.I. 24.3) — still normal by current guidelines — had more than double the risk. The study controlled for sex, education, socioeconomic status and other factors.
The lowest risk for death was among those with B.M.I.’s between 18.3 and 19.8, the low end of normal.
“A single study shouldn’t by itself change what is considered to be the normal range,” said the lead author, Dr. Gilad Twig, an internist at the Sheba Medical Center in Israel. “But being overweight in adolescence is bad — we knew that before, and this study shows it’s really bad.”

2016年4月16日星期六

Secrets of the Blue Zones

In most of the world, the prospect of living to age 100 sounds like a mixed blessing. While a long life is generally good, many people worry that it also equals diminished health and mental function. But that isn't so in the "blue zones."

In four hot spots around the globe, people live to 100 in great numbers. But it's not only about longevity—they live with strength, vitality and happiness. Residents of the blue zones regularly exercise, tend their gardens, are active members of their communities, eat delicious food and even have sex!

To find out what they're doing right—and we're doing wrong—Oprah and Dr. Oz look to Dan Buettner, a freelance writer for National Geographic who spent seven years researching his book The Blue Zones: Lessons for Living Longer from the People Who've Lived the Longest.

The first blue zone on the list is Costa Rica's Nicoya Peninsula, a small region located about a two-hour trip on bumpy roads from the national capital of San Jose. Nicoya is the biggest blue zone on earth—home to literally hundreds of centenarians.

To see what makes the residents of the Nicoya Peninsula so vital, Dr. Oz and Dan paid a visit. There, they met 102-year-old Panchita, who still chops wood every day for cooking; 86-year-old Filippa, who sells her homemade tamales; and 95-year-old Serillo, who was cruising by on his bike as he visited with neighbors.
But to meet one of the oldest Nicoyans, Dan took Dr. Oz on a hike deep into the rainforest.

After hours of soggy trekking, Dan and Dr. Oz met Patrone—who says he's an astonishing 107 years old!

Dan says one of the secrets of Nicoyans' lifespan can be found in the water that flows through the hills. Their water is among the hardest in Costa Rica—which means it's chock-full of minerals. "Hard water means stronger bones. It also means your muscles are probably working better, especially when you get old," Dan says.
Dr. Oz says hard water has proven benefits. "Calcium, magnesium and water—it relaxes your arteries, it builds bone strength and it has a huge benefit across the board in how your body functions," he says.

Having strong bones is actually one of the most important ways to live a long life. "One of the biggest killers of older people in this country is simply falling down and breaking a bone," Dan says. "If you take calcium and couple it with vitamin D, your bones don't deteriorate as quickly."

To re-create the benefits of the Nicoyans' calcium-rich water, Dan suggests eating eggs and dairy. You can get calcium from other sources too, including leafy green vegetables like kale and broccoli.

While visiting Patrone, Dan and Dr. Oz enjoyed a meal prepared by his 65-year-old daughter. Families stay together in Nicoya, which is another important key to living a long life.

For lunch, she made corn tortillas from scratch. First, she soaks the corn in ash and lime to break it down. Then, she smashes it in a metate—a Central American stone mortar. Then, she cooks the corn patties without oil. "It's a lot of hard work, and there's no electricity, so she can't do it any other way," Dr. Oz says. "And it's a good workout."

This daily process of cooking tortillas is like an automatic workout. "You know, most Americans don't really exercise. A very small proportion," Dan says. "But in Nicoya, they'll be making lunch and it's like doing 25 reps with the free weights."

Dan and Dr. Oz's next stop is the home of 99-year-old Jose, who tells them about his typical day. Jose says after breakfast he tends his garden and clears underbrush around his corn crops.

When he sees Jose squatting down and using a machete to cut weeds around his corn plants, Dr. Oz is dumbstruck. "He's whacking through this stuff better than any lawn mower you can buy. It's remarkable," he says. "I'm looking at a 99-year-old man doing a better job than I could taking out the underbrush here."

Dr. Oz asks to examine Jose further and finds that his daily chores have built up strong chest, stomach and leg muscles, which are crucial for aging well. Dr. Oz explains that the quadriceps—the large group of muscles on the front of the thigh—allow you to bend your hips and extend your knee and are crucial for walking. "If you can't walk a quarter-mile in five minutes, the chance that you'll be dead in three years is three times higher than if you can," he says. "It's a big deal."

One exercise you can do to strengthen the quadriceps is a basic squat. Make the motion of sitting in a chair, but don't sit all the way down. "Just go down close to it and get back up," Dr. Oz says.

For those who are too weak for this exercise, Dr. Oz recommends repeatedly sitting and standing in a chair without using the armrests. "It's simple things like that," he says. "And [the Nicoyans] make it part of their life."

Another crucial factor to Nicoyan longevity is diet. On his land, Jose has 14 different kinds of trees that produce ripe fruit all year long.

But the real secret may be in what Dan calls the "Mesoamerican trifecta" that is the predominant diet in much of Central America—and has been for 3,500 years! The diet consists of lightly salted corn tortillas, beans and squash. "It's arguably the best longevity food ever invented," Dan says.

Another important aspect of the Nicoyan diet is that they tend to eat their larger meals in the morning, with progressively smaller meals throughout the day. This not only leaves Nicoyans craving fewer calories during the day, it also lets them transition into sleep much more easily when darkness falls. "A hundred years ago, when the sun went down, the brain would start making more melatonin. And with more melatonin, you'd get tired, you'd get drowsy," Dr. Oz says. "Today, the reason half of us don't sleep normally is because the last thing we see is a computer screen or the tube. That actually does the opposite to your brain—it stimulates it. So of course you can't fall asleep. You've got to glide to sleep."

The next stop on our blue zone tour is Sardinia, a Mediterranean island 120 miles off the coast of Italy. Here, you'll find the highest number of male centenarians in the world.
When Dan drops in on 105-year-old Giovanni, he's greeted with a glass of wine—at 10 a.m.! Then, to test his strength, Dan challenges Giovanni to arm wrestle—and loses.

Giovanni spent most of his life walking Sardinia's rocky terrain as a sheep herder. The low-impact exercise helps keep his heart strong, especially since a daily Sardinian hike through the mountains can burn up to 490 calories an hour.

What fuels Giovanni? "I eat bread, cheese and dark wine," he says.You don't have to travel to the Mediterranean to incorporate these age-defying delicacies into your diet. Planning a Sardinian menu? Start with eating a lean, plant-based diet and only have meat as a side dish.

One major staple? Dairy. "The pecorino cheese Sardinia is known for is rich in omega-3 fatty acids," Dr. Oz says. "Pecorino cheese is available in grocery stores, and if it's made from grass-fed cow's milk, you'll get an extra dose of omega-3.
Pair a hunk of cheese with a slice of whole grain bread, and you've got a Sardinian snack with some longevity. Another snack option? Sardines. "They've got omega-3s in them, key minerals and iron," Dr. Oz says.

Sardinians also drink goat's milk, which is high in calcium and good for your heart. "Plus, researchers believe it could protect against Alzheimer's and heart disease," Dr. Oz says.

Not only is goat's milk healthy, it's easier for your stomach to digest and is also good for people who are lactose intolerant. "It has tryptophan, that same sort of mellowing agent that turkey has," Dr. Oz says. "The fat particles in goat milk are much smaller than in cow milk, so you don't have to mix it up. And when you mix up fat globules, in some people it makes enzymes that irritate your stomach." Goat's milk is available in most grocery store dairy departments—just look for it in a smaller size than a gallon.

The Sardinians eat foods with a lot of color—which helps them get a healthy dose of vitamin D. "One thing the blue zones all seem to have is a lot of sun exposure. Of course, the sun gives you the vitamin D that we know is the single most important vitamin deficiency in America," Dr. Oz says. "The sun's doing what the fruits and vegetables are doing—they're protecting your insides."

Another secret to the Sardinians' long lives? Red wine. "It's actually polyphenols, which is a type of artery-scrubbing antioxidant. We actually had this wine tested. It has three times the level of antioxidants than any other wine," Dan says.
Dr. Oz says 90 percent of the benefit of wine is because of its alcohol. The other 10 percent is because it's got an antioxidant called resveratrol.

But the real benefits of drinking wine—red or white—aren't nutritional. "Wine happens at 5 at night when you get together with your friends. It happens with your family. And it's as much the ritual and doing it a little bit every day," Dan says. "They say people who drink two glasses of wine a day outlive those people who don't drink any. But you can't save up and drink 14 on Saturday."

Living like a Sardinian means putting family first and celebrating those in your closest social circles. Studies show that people who live in healthy families suffer lower rates of depression, suicide and stress. "The biggest determiner of how long you live is who you hang out with. If your three best friends are overweight, there's a 50 percent better chance that you'll be overweight yourself," Dan says.

Home to the longest-living Americans is Loma Linda, California, a town 60 miles east of Los Angeles.

A big part of life in Loma Linda revolves around faith—it's home to 9,000 followers of the Seventh Day Adventist church. The Christian religion emphasizes diet and health and frowns on smoking, drinking and eating meat and processed foods.
Heart surgeon Ellsworth Wareham is a 94-year-old Adventist who can still be found in the operating room. "I think it's important for an individual to have some security and peace in his life. And I get that from believing in a loving, caring God, you see. And so if he's in charge of my life, why sit around and worry? I mean, he takes care of the universe, he can certainly take care of me, so I don't worry."

Dr. Wareham also follows a vegan diet, which means he doesn't eat any meat, milk or eggs. He also spends about 10 hours a week working in his garden. "I've been fortunate, first, but I do try to follow a good lifestyle," he says.

Dr. Wareham has been taking patients into the operating room since before Dr. Oz was born. To learn more of his secrets of longevity, Dr. Oz scrubs in with Dr. Wareham, who's glad to have him. "I think that if you're old, you should keep away from old people. And keep with young people, you see," Dr. Wareham says. "If I can keep around fellas like you, I'll be invigorated for days from having met you."

Having performed more than 12,000 operations in his life, Dr. Wareham credits his passion for work with keeping him healthy. "I doubt if my health would be as good as it is now," he says. "And I am fearful to change anything I'm doing because I'm not only alive, but I feel good. I'm not taking any medications."

But it may not be the work that's keeping Dr. Wareham healthy. It's more about a sense of purpose, Dr. Oz says. Dan says people in most blue zones don't even have a word for retirement. "Before you retire, knowing what your values are, knowing what your gifts are and where to share those gifts. That's a great investment," Dan says.

Not even Barbara, Dr. Wareham's wife of 58 years, wants him to retire. "People ask me that a lot and I just say, 'Leave him alone. He's happy,'" she says. "I don't think he'd be nearly so happy just sitting at home."

As seen in Nicoya and Sardinia, strong relationships are also key to a long life. So what's the secret of the Warehams' marriage? "Don't try to change them," Dr. Wareham says. "We all have different backgrounds, and we have different genes. Let the person be who they are."

While investigating the longevity of the Loma Lindans, Dan had the pleasure of meeting 103-year-old Marge Jetton. Marge's secret to staying healthy is daily exercise and volunteerism.

Marge's daily exercise routine consists of weight lifting and riding a stationary bicycle for 7 or 8 miles at 25 mph! "You know, it's impressive," Dr. Oz says. "Most folks watching this program I don't think can go 25 miles an hour." While Marge demonstrates her dumbbell workout, Dr. Oz notices how strong her arms look. "They're very big. This is priceless," Dr. Oz says. "She's pumping iron."

After 77 years of marriage, Marge's husband passed away. As most people would do, Marge mourned her loss, but then realized that there was more for her to do. "She said, 'I realized the world is not going to come to me. I need to go to the world,'" Dan says. "And she still volunteers for seven organizations at 103. So it's a sign of being healthy."

While many residents of Loma Linda may keep healthy by eating well, exercising and volunteering, another aspect that might be overlooked is religion. Nine-thousand Loma Lindans—about half of the town's population—are members of Seventh Day Adventist Church, which emphasizes a very strict observance of the sabbath. "For 24 hours every week no matter how stressed out, no matter where the kids need to be driven to, they stop everything," Dan says. "From Friday night until Saturday night, they focus on their God, their family, their community."

Dan believes that being a member of a community where everyone has the same values can add quality years to your life. Dr. Oz says that showing gratitude is another reason why people in these communities have such long and healthy lives. "If you're grateful for the things that have always happened to you, sometimes they're not always good, but you find lessons and meaning in them," Dr. Oz says. "Hope isn't about a good outcome. It's about making sense of stuff. And these people have made sense of their life, and they do it all the time."

When Dr. Oz and Dan went into a grocery store in Loma Linda, they said it was easy to see why their community has lived such long and healthy lives. "It's full of bins of locally grown beans and nuts," Oprah says. "And aisles of fresh fruits and vegetables.
Normally, eating healthy is thought to be expensive, but the price of foods are relatively inexpensive in Loma Linda because most of their beans and nuts are locally grown and because of how they package the foods. "They sold these in big bins so you didn't pay a lot of money for marketing and for packaging," Dr. Oz says. "It just was the bin."

Get vegan and vegetarian recipes straight from Loma Linda.
Because so many residents of Loma Linda are vegans, there is no meat or dairy in their diets, which Dan believes contributes to their health. "You can eat meat, but ... keep it as a sideshow," he says.

The Japanese island of Okinawa is another zone in which people live long and healthy lives. "Okinawans live a good seven years longer than Americans," Dr. Oz says. "And they suffer about 80 percent fewer heart attacks and cancer than people in the U.S."
The Okinawans attribute their health and longevity to a couple of words, ikigai and moai. Ikigai means "that which makes one's life worth living." Moai means that one has a social support network. "Having lifelong friends is key to shedding stress," Dr. Oz says. Daily exercise and gardening are a few ways in which 84-year-old Fumiyasa Yomikawa gets his ikigai.

The Okinawan diet is made up of tofu, vegetables and fish. But a ritual they do before each meal also contributes to their health. "Okinawans recite 'hara hachi bu,'" Dr. Oz says. "[It's] an adage that reminds them to stop eating when they're 80 percent full."
"Hara hachi bu. That's what I need to do," Oprah says. "And how do you know when you're 80 percent full?"

"Well, the reality is, and many of you have experienced this, if you eat what you normally eat in a meal, you'll feel really full about 15, 20 minutes later," Dr. Oz says. "The only way to really know you're going to be 80 percent full is to stop eating way before you think you're going to be full."

2016年4月14日星期四

Is Coconut Oil Bad for Your Cholesterol?

“Ever since I started using coconut oil, my cholesterol has spiked,” writes this week’s house call. “I’m afraid coconut oil with all that saturated fat is creating more harm than good. Should I continue to use it?”
Since I expressed my love for medium-chain triglyceride oil or MCT oil, I’ve received this question several times.
I call MCTs (found in coconut oil) a super fuel for your cells because your body uses this kind of fat very efficiently. Your cells burn MCTs for energy while storing very little as fat, boosting your metabolism and supporting your immune system.
MCTs also help balance many hormones, including the ones that control your appetite. They keep you feeling full and satisfied. They actually improve your cholesterol profile.
They also help your body burn fat. One study found that consuming MCT oils helped reduce body fat and triglycerides more than omega 6 vegetable oils. After eight weeks, the experiment showed the MCT oil group lost more weight, body fat and subcutaneous fat, all while experiencing a 15 percent drop in triglycerides and LDL.
At the same time, as MCT-rich coconut oil becomes more popular, it also becomes a concern among some folks because of its high amounts of saturated fat and potential for raising cholesterol.
The reality is, cholesterol is not black and white. Classifying it as “good” or “bad” vastly oversimplifies this molecule, which among its duties helpssynthesize vitamin D and hormones while maintaining cell structure.
Some fats do raise cholesterol, whereas others lower cholesterol. Even when saturated fat does raise your cholesterol, the type of cholesterol becomes more important than cholesterol itself.
As a doctor, I tell patients that abnormal cholesterol can become a problem when it is the small dense LDL particles, accompanied by high triglycerides.  In fact small LDL particles actually triple your risk of heart disease. This is caused by high-carb, low-fat diets and is improved when you add fat back to the diet, including saturated fat. 
Studies show saturated fat raises LDL (your so-called “bad” cholesterol) but it improves the quality of the LDL and increases its size making it less likely to promote heart disease. It also raises HDL (“good” cholesterol). On the other hand, sugar lowers HDL.   Ultimately, the ratio of total to LDL cholesterol and particle number and size are a far bigger predictor of heart attacks than LDL itself. 
That brings us back to coconut oil, which can contain up to 40 percent saturated fat. Interestingly, countries with the highest intakes of coconut oil have the lowest rates of heart disease
While research shows coconut oil contains higher amounts of saturated fat and does increase total cholesterol, those amounts do not increase your heart attack or stroke risk.
In fact, one study among lean, heart disease- and stroke-free Pacific Islanders who consumed up to 63 percent of their calories from coconut fat found total cholesterol rose but so did their “good” HDL.
Other studies found lipid profiles improve on high-fat diets containing coconut oil. Researchers concluded it wasn’t saturated fat from coconuts that negatively impacted cholesterol profile. Instead, the coconut oil’s overall effect raised HDL while lowering triglycerides and small LDL cholesterol particles, which is definitely a good thing.
Coconut oil provides other benefits such as lowering insulin levels, protecting against heart disease. The predominant fatty acid in coconut oil is lauric acid, which provides antimicrobial, antibacterial and antiviral benefits.
 There is a huge difference between quality saturated fat in coconut oil or MCT oils, as compared with what you get in a fast food cheeseburger. Lumping them all together becomes like putting cauliflower and a cupcake under the carbohydrate category.
Don’t be afraid of saturated fat, but get it from healthy sources like coconuts and grass-fed beef, which automatically edges out unhealthy sources.
And total cholesterol is not an accurate predictor of heart disease or stroke. Inflammation is the culprit for most diseases, and coconut oil is highly anti-inflammatory.
To answer your question…if your doctor finds you have high cholesterol, ask him or her to dig deeper to see what’s really going on. Ask the right questions and most importantly, get the right tests! 
You should request a particle size test to check for cholesterol particle size and number. Other cholesterol tests are simply outdated. A routine, regular cholesterol test won’t reveal particle size.
The tests you’ll want to ask for are either an NMR Lipid Panel from LabCorp or the Cardio IQ Test from Quest Diagnostics. Those are the only tests to really know what’s going on with your cholesterol. Optimal results will show plenty of safe, light, fluffy, big particles with minimal small, dense, artery-damaging particles.
Combine healthy fats with a no-added-sugar diet and you have an effective strategy to normalize cholesterol while reducing your risk for heart disease, obesity, type 2 diabetes and numerous other chronic conditions. Eliminating refined carbs and sugar and adding adequate omega 3 fats means saturated fat should not be a problem. 
In one interventional trial, researchers showed even on a low-carb diet that was higher in saturated fats, blood levels of saturated fat were lower. That’s because dietary saturated fats do not raise dangerous blood saturated fats – sugar and refined carbs do!  They also found people on a higher saturated-fat diet had lower levels of inflammation and oxidative stress, as well as a better cholesterol profile.
Other studies confirm carbs worsen blood levels of the even chained saturated-fats, which cause heart disease. These carbs drive your liver to create more fat in your blood, a process called lipogenesis triggered by alcohol, soda, sugar-sweetened drinks, starches and sugars. Whole, healthy-fat foods like butter, meat or cheese do not increase this process.
Note, too, that recent U.S. Dietary Guidelines finally stopped recommending lowering cholesterol and dietary fat. In fact, the new guidelines don’t emphasize any limit on total dietary fat or cholesterol, which is a complete reversal on governmental advice from 35 years ago. Better late than never!
If you’re curious to learn more, I dive deep into the benefits of coconut oil and saturated fat while busting cholesterol and other myths in my new book, Eat Fat, Get Thin.
Simply put, the real villain that robs our health and increases our waistlines is sugar and anything that breaks down to sugar like refined carbohydrates. Quality fats like coconut oil and more anti-inflammatoryomega 3 fats help edge out those sugars and inflammatory refined omega 6 fat vegetable oils.

A Decades-Old Study, Rediscovered, Challenges Advice on Saturated Fat

A four-decades-old study — recently discovered in a dusty basement — has raised new questions about longstanding dietary advice and the perils of saturated fat in the American diet.
The research, known as the Minnesota Coronary Experiment, was a major controlled clinical trial conducted from 1968 to 1973, which studied the diets of more than 9,000 people at state mental hospitals and a nursing home.
During the study, which was paid for by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute and led by Dr. Ivan Frantz Jr. of the University of Minnesota Medical School, researchers were able to tightly regulate the diets of the institutionalized study subjects. Half of those subjects were fed meals rich in saturated fats from milk, cheese and beef. The remaining group ate a diet in which much of the saturated fat was removed and replaced with corn oil, an unsaturated fat that is common in many processed foods today. The study was intended to show that removing saturated fat from people’s diets and replacing it with polyunsaturated fat from vegetable oils would protect them against heart disease and lower their mortality.
So what was the result? Despite being one of the largest controlled clinical dietary trials of its kind ever conducted, the data were never fully analyzed.
Several years ago, Christopher E. Ramsden, a medical investigator at the National Institutes of Health, learned about the long-overlooked study. Intrigued, he contacted the University of Minnesota in hopes of reviewing the unpublished data. Dr. Frantz, who died in 2009, had been a prominent scientist at the university, where he studied the link between saturated fat and heart disease. One of his closest colleagues was Ancel Keys, an influential scientist whose research in the 1950s helped establish saturated fat as public health enemy No. 1, prompting the federal government to recommend low-fat diets to the entire nation.
“My father definitely believed in reducing saturated fats, and I grew up that way,” said Dr. Robert Frantz, the lead researcher’s son and a cardiologist at the Mayo Clinic. “We followed a relatively low-fat diet at home, and on Sundays or special occasions, we’d have bacon and eggs.”
The younger Dr. Frantz made three trips to the family home, finally discovering the dusty box marked “Minnesota Coronary Survey,” in his father’s basement. He turned it over to Dr. Ramsden for analysis.
The results were a surprise. Participants who ate a diet low in saturated fat and enriched with corn oil reduced their cholesterol by an average of 14 percent, compared with a change of just 1 percent in the control group. But the low-saturated fat diet did not reduce mortality. In fact, the study found that the greater the drop in cholesterol, the higher the risk of death during the trial.
The findings run counter to conventional dietary recommendations that advise a diet low in saturated fat to decrease heart risk. Current dietary guidelinescall for Americans to replace saturated fat, which tends to raise cholesterol, with vegetable oils and other polyunsaturated fats, which lower cholesterol.
While it is unclear why the trial data had not previously been fully analyzed, one possibility is that Dr. Frantz and his colleagues faced resistance from medical journals at a time when questioning the link between saturated fat and disease was deeply unpopular.
“It could be that they tried to publish all of their results but had a hard time getting them published,” said Daisy Zamora, an author of the new study and a research scientist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
The younger Dr. Frantz said his father was probably startled by what seemed to be no benefit in replacing saturated fat with vegetable oil.
“When it turned out that it didn’t reduce risk, it was quite puzzling,” he said. “And since it was effective in lowering cholesterol, it was weird.”
The new analysis, published on Tuesday in the journal BMJ, elicited a sharp response from top nutrition experts, who said the study was flawed. Walter Willett, the chairman of the nutrition department at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, called the research “irrelevant to current dietary recommendations” that emphasize replacing saturated fat with polyunsaturated fat.
Frank Hu, a nutrition expert who served on the government’s 2015 dietary guidelines committee, said the Minnesota trial was not long enough to show the cardiovascular benefits of consuming vegetable oil because the patients on average were followed for only about 15 months. He pointed to a major 2010 meta-analysis that found that people had fewer heart attacks when they increased their intake of vegetable oils and other polyunsaturated fats over at least four years.
“I don’t think the authors’ strong conclusions are supported by the data,” he said.
To investigate whether the new findings were a fluke, Dr. Zamora and her colleagues analyzed four similar, rigorous trials that tested the effects of replacing saturated fat with vegetable oils rich in linoleic acid. Those, too, failed to show any reduction in mortality from heart disease.
“One would expect that the more you lowered cholesterol, the better the outcome,” Dr. Ramsden said. “But in this case the opposite association was found. The greater degree of cholesterol-lowering was associated with a higher, rather than a lower, risk of death.”
One explanation for the surprise finding may be omega-6 fatty acids, which are found in high levels in corn, soybean, cottonseed and sunflower oils. While leading nutrition experts point to ample evidence that cooking with these vegetable oils instead of butter improves cholesterol and prevents heart disease, others argue that high levels of omega-6 can simultaneously promote inflammation. This inflammation could outweigh the benefits of cholesterol reduction, they say.
In 2013, Dr. Ramsden and his colleagues published a controversial paper about a large clinical trial that had been carried out in Australia in the 1960s but had never been fully analyzed. The trial found that men who replaced saturated fat with omega-6-rich polyunsaturated fats lowered their cholesterol. But they were also more likely to die from a heart attackthan a control group of men who ate more saturated fat.
Ron Krauss, the former chairman of the American Heart Association’s dietary guidelines committee, said the new research was intriguing. But he said there was a vast body of research supporting polyunsaturated fats for heart health, and that the relationship between cholesterol-lowering and mortality could be deceiving.
People who have high LDL cholesterol, the so-called bad kind, typically experience greater drops in cholesterol in response to dietary changes than people with lower LDL. Perhaps people in the new study who had the greatest drop in cholesterol also had higher mortality rates because they had more underlying disease.
“It’s possible that the greater cholesterol response was in people who had more vascular risk related to their higher cholesterol levels,” he said.
Dr. Ramsden stressed that the team’s findings should be interpreted cautiously. The research does not show that saturated fats are beneficial, he said: “But maybe they’re not as bad as people thought.”
The research underscores that the science behind dietary fat may be more complex than nutrition recommendations suggest. The body requires omega-6 fats like linoleic acid in small amounts. But emerging research suggests that in excess linoleic acid may play a role in a variety of disorders including liver disease and chronic pain.
A century ago, it was common for Americans to get about 2 percent of their daily calories from linoleic acid. Today, Americans on average consume more than triple that amount, much of it from processed foods like lunch meats, salad dressings, desserts, pizza, french fries and packaged snacks like potato chips. More natural sources of fat such as olive oil, butter and egg yolks contain linoleic acid as well but in smaller quantities.
Eating whole, unprocessed foods and plants may be one way to get all the linoleic acid your body needs, Dr. Ramsden said.

2016年4月12日星期二

腰围标准

在中国,成年人群适宜的腰围数男士为85厘米,女士为80厘米,一旦超出这个标准,患心脑血管疾病糖尿病等慢性病的危险将大大增加。

  “男性85厘米、女性80厘米”这一安全腰围是中国肥胖问题专家组历时9个月,在全国21个省市自治区的30万成年人的腰上“量”出来的。

肥胖症已成为世界性的流行病,它不仅是个美观问题,而且容易并发许多富贵病,如糖尿病、高血压病等,因而导致心脑血管病变,如心肌梗死及脑卒中等。肥胖症的外形分两种,即腹型肥胖及均匀型肥胖,又称为苹果型肥胖及梨型肥胖。前者指肥胖主要在腹部,也有人称之为老板肚、啤酒肚等。进一步研究发现对健康有危害的主要是腹型肥胖,因为腹部内脏脂肪增多,而这一类脂肪危害较皮下脂肪大。

  但如何测定腹内脂肪呢?医学上可以用核磁共振扫描(MRI),从横断面上测量腹部脂肪的面积。此方法只有城市大医院可做,而且昂贵,不能普及。因此临床上研究用测腰围的方法,大致上可以推断腹部脂肪的多少,而测腰围甚至是在家都可以做到。

但腰围以多少厘米为标准呢?这就复杂了,很明显的男女性别不同,腰围也不同;此外种属不同也有差异;另外凭什么说这样长的腰围不好,在此之内则是正常,等等。这些问题在世界上也有争议,经过多年的研究渐趋统一。在2005年召开的国际糖尿病联盟讨论代谢综合征的定义时,认为腹型肥胖是首要条件,当时在有中国医生参加会议的情况下,把中国人腰围标准定为男性<90厘米,女性<80厘米。超过此标准则为腹型肥胖


北京定标准

  
北京设男女腰围标准:男不超2尺7女不超2尺4

  每天吃盐不超6克,日睡眠不少于7小时,男性腰围不超过2尺7,女性腰围不超2尺4……近日,北京市健康促进工作委员会、市卫生局联合发布《北京人健康指引》征集公众建议,其中包括34条北京人健康指标,并专门提到健康的北京,应该能对“二手烟”说不。

  市卫生局副局长赵春惠介绍,《北京人健康指引(征求意见稿)》,是根据国内外相关资料,结合北京市民的健康状况得出的。

  目前《北京人健康指引(征求意见稿)》已全文刊载于北京市卫生信息网,意见征求时间截至3月25日。

  调查 北京人油盐超标一倍

  按照《北京人健康指引》的合理膳食标准,健康北京人饮食要清淡少盐,少吃荤油。每天油摄入不超过25-30克,每天盐摄入不超过6克。

  但北京市疾控中心的调查显示,目前,北京市民平均每人每天吃油54克,每天吃盐13.4克,超过健康指引目标的一倍。

  举措 食堂餐厅推广低钠盐

  针对目前多数北京市民由于工作、交通等客观原因,经常要在集体食堂或街头餐厅吃中、晚餐的情况,卫生部门已着手关注食堂、餐厅的菜品健康。

  目前,东城区已在全市试点,选取一家餐饮公司和一家职工食堂为试点,开展健康教育与健康干预。同时在试点单位推广使用低钠盐,并进行油、盐使用情况监测,每天记录餐厅油、盐使用情况,逐步减少菜品中的油、盐使用量。

   北京人健康指引摘录

  每周至少有氧运动三次,每次至少30分钟;

  饮用煮开的水和安全的水,每天不少于1200毫升;

  不吸烟,不在公共场所吸烟,拒绝被动吸烟;

  不饮酒,少饮酒,不酗酒;

  每天睡眠不少于7~8小时;

  饭前饭后、便前便后要洗手,肥皂搓双手至少20秒,用流动水冲洗。

女性腰围新标准


肥胖症已成为世界性的流行病,它不仅是个美观问题,而且容易并发许多富贵病,如糖尿病、高血压病等,因而导致心脑血管病变,如心肌梗死及脑卒中等。肥胖症的外形分两种,即腹型肥胖及均匀型肥胖,又称为苹果型肥胖及梨型肥胖。前者指肥胖主要在腹部,也有人称之为老板肚、啤酒肚等。进一步研究发现对健康有危害的主要是腹型肥胖,因为腹部内脏脂肪增多,而这一类脂肪危害较皮下脂肪大。

  但如何测定腹内脂肪呢?医学上可以用核磁共振扫描(MRI),从横断面上测量腹部脂肪的面积。此方法只有城市大医院可做,而且昂贵,不能普及。因此临床上研究用测腰围的方法,大致上可以推断腹部脂肪的多少,而测腰围甚至是在家都可以做到。

  但腰围以多少厘米为标准呢?这就复杂了,很明显的男女性别不同,腰围也不同;此外种属不同也有差异;另外凭什么说这样长的腰围不好,在此之内则是正常,等等。这些问题在世界上也有争议,经过多年的研究渐趋统一。在2005年召开的国际糖尿病联盟讨论代谢综合征的定义时,认为腹型肥胖是首要条件,当时在有中国医生参加会议的情况下,把中国人腰围标准定为男性<90厘米,女性<80厘米。超过此标准则为腹型肥胖。

  此标准中尤其是妇女的标准在我国实践中问题较多,因为在订定时缺乏我国的具体资料。近年来有些单位进行了研究,尤其是上海市糖尿病研究所在贾伟平教授领衔下,测定了较大样本人群。他们认为中国人的体脂分布具有一定的特殊性,表现为肥胖程度较西方人轻,而体脂分布趋于向腹腔内积聚,即容易形成腹型肥胖。即在体质指数(BMI)≥25kg/m2的人群中有62%是腹型肥胖,即使BMI

  他们测定了1140例的腹部核磁共振成像,以腹内脂肪面积>80cm2为标准,从而与腰围进行了对比分析,相应的腰围参数:男性>87.5cm,女性>84.3cm。经过讨论取其整数,故提出“腰围男性>90cm,女性>85cm”作为中国人腹型肥胖的诊断标准是较为合理的。此数字与过去标准比主要是女性标准改为85,而不是80。此数字目前已经公认写入一些“指南”等书籍。

  此外,要注意测腰围的方法,一些露脐裤、低腰裤、老板裤等的裤腰不能作为医学上的腰围数字。也不是以脐周围的长度作准,而应该以左右肋骨下缘与髂前上嵴联线之中点,经此左右两点的腹围才是医学上的腰围。

  重视保健、养生的朋友们,请测一下自己的腰围吧!

女人四十岁的腰围标准

女人了四十岁:腰围别超85cm

  近日,中国心脏大会在北京召开,为了让人们更深刻地了解腰围与健康之间关系,此次会议的组委会专门设置了一场辩论会,心血管病领域里的大牌专家就女性腰围健康上限,应该是80cm还是85cm展开了辩论。

  男人说:女人二十岁看脸,三十岁看胸,四十岁看腰。

  女人说:出了电梯上汽车,宅在家里不运动,谁有“好腰”。

  专家说:女人40岁前腰围别超80cm,40后别超85cm。

  日本人说:我们的腰围标准是“男蜂腰”、“女熊腰”。

  80还是85?

  几个人在争论女人的腰围。

  有句名言说:男人看女人,二十岁看脸,三十岁看胸,四十岁看腰!越是成熟的男人越看重女人的腰部。

  而这次,盯住女人腰围的,是我国心血管病领域里的几位“顶尖高手”,他们争论的数字,是女人腰围健康的“高压线”。

  有人说“全身胖是种病,肚子胖才要命”。当你的腰围超过了一定标准,一段时间之后,你很可能面对的是心血管病、糖尿病、高血压等疾病的发生。

  女人的腰究竟多粗时亮“黄灯”,多粗时亮“红灯”呢?

  腰围中国女人粗了5cm

  日本女人粗于男人

  漂亮女人常被称为“妖精”,那她首先必须是个“腰精”,即要拥有纤细的腰肢。如果女人的腰,开始发福、变粗、僵硬,甚至变水桶腰时,便是女人生命力衰退的开始。也就是说,当女人的腰不再灵活时,女人味、女人的诱惑,便衰减了很多。

  同时衰减的,还有女人的健康。

  临床医学上,有一个较奇怪的现象:几种疾病往往会同时聚集在一个人身上,这几种疾病包括心血管疾病、2型糖尿病、高血压等。而这个人的典型特征就是肥胖,尤其是腰粗肚子大。

  专家把这种现象归结为“X综合征”,又叫“代谢综合征”。

  女性腰围和死亡率的关系是一个U型的曲线,腰太粗或者腰太细都不好,这是欧洲一项35万人的大型研究得出的结论。

  那么,女人健康腰围的临界点究竟划在哪呢?

  北京阜外心血管病医院流行病学研究室副主任李莹教授通过近八年的随访,研究了分布在我国东部14个省市的两万五千人的腰围和死亡率的关系之后,得出这样的结论:男女腰围达到85cm以上时,死亡率逐渐相近,都有增高的趋势。特别是女性,当腰围大于85cm时,心血管病的死亡率明显增高。

  而此前关于女性腰围,世界卫生组织给出的建议则是80cm。

  上海交通大学附属第六人民医院副院长、内分泌科主任贾伟平教授认为,这5cm之差,正是我国与世界平均值的差异性。

  日本人更加“特立独行”——男人要“蜂腰”,而女人则可以“熊腰”。

  日本的公共卫生专家把男性的切入腰围定义在85cm,女性是90cm。

  此标准一出台,所有人都在质疑是不是日本人搞错了。但他们坚持自己国家人口的腰围标准就应该是男性低、女性高,因为他们依据的是本国的确切统计数字。

      年龄40岁前别超80cm

      40岁后别超85cm

  男人说,腰是女人除了臀部和胸部以外的第三维性感符号。女人说,腰是女人除了脸和脖子以外第三个泄露年龄的部位。

  现在的很多女性,长期已经习惯于乘电梯,坐汽车,在办公室、在家里长期不运动,这种状态的女人,能有几个有“好腰”?

  在普通人眼里,好看的腰才是“好腰”,但专家们要求没那么严格,认为只要不会增加心血管疾病的危险,就是“好腰”。

  北京阜外心血管病医院副院长顾东风和该院心内科主任医师顼志敏教授都主张,心血管病的发病率与年龄有非常大的关系,所以女性40岁之前,80cm的腰围是可以的,而到了40岁之后,定在85cm比较合适。

  讲完之后,顼教授摸了摸自己的肚子,“我也是危险人群,我正努力回到健康的标准。”

  中日友好医院内分泌代谢病中心主任医师李光伟教授认为,许多腰围不超过80cm的女性其实是没有必要干预的。

  专家说的不是腰围

  而是健康意识

  判断一个女人是否有情趣,是看眼睛;了解一个女人是否灵动和柔韧,是看腰。女人腰围无论是80cm,还是85cm,都不够灵动,而只是医学范畴的尺寸。

  腰围本身并不是一个危险因素,它只是提醒我们,如果到了这个腰围,就该常去量量血压,查查血脂,检查是否有糖尿病等。

  北京阜外心血管病医院流行病研究室副主任赵连成教授说,无论是80cm,还是85cm,其实都不是一种具体的指标,而是一种健康意识。“因为你只要肥胖,高血压、高血脂、心血管疾病的几率就会增加。”他说。

  这也是辩论现场所有专家得到的共识:女性腰围如果到了80cm要引起警惕,而若是超过了85cm,就需要行动起来了!

  辩论结束后,还有不少观众围住顾东风教授,询问健康的生活方式如何定义,顾教授呵呵一笑,说:“还是那句话‘管住嘴,迈开腿’,人人都知道,重点在坚持。”

  副院长教你测腰围

  辩论结束后,有观众围住专家发问,“教授,您说怎么才能正确测量自己的腰围啊?”北京阜外心血管病医院副院长顾东风用指甲指指自己的肚脐处,说:“喏,从肚脐开始一圈,就是正确的腰围,最好测量两次,误差在0.5cm间,说明是正确数值。”“那我测量的时候应该是呼气还是吸气呢?”观众接着问。教授笑了,“保持自然状态就好,不用刻意,不然呼气过头,腰围就大了,吸气过头,腰围又小了。”

日本标准


日本肥胖学会考虑修改肥胖症腰围标准

       日本肥胖学会日前设立专门委员会,就肥胖症代谢综合症判断标准之一的;男性腰围85公分以上,女性90公分以上;这一现行标准是否合理展开了正式讨论。
  该委员会正在对大量数据进行分析,计划明年公布结果。
  腰围代表了内脏脂肪的积蓄量,而这正是生活习惯病的病因。相比其他国家,日本的标准值对男性相当严格,对女性却较为宽松,有人对这一罕见状况提出了异议。从去年起;特定体检(即代谢体检);也加入了腰围测量项目,标准一旦改变势必也将影响到保健指导。
  现行标准是用肥胖学会在2000年设定的肥胖症判断标准。它也被相关学会2005年联合制定的代谢综合症判断标准所采纳。厚生劳动省也在代谢体检中采用了这一标准。
  然而,这一标准也存在着作为制定依据的基础数据大多是显著肥胖者及女性数量较少等问题。
  各个国家和地域的腰围标准各不相同。例如在美国,男性标准为102公分以上,女性标准为88公分以上。


腰围标准计算法

  
      什么样的身材才完美呢?你知道标准的三围是什么样的吗?如果不知道,那么你就看下面的公式,那就是你努力的目标!

  胸围=身高 X 0.51 ( 如:身高160cm的标准胸围=160cm X 0.51=81.6cm )

  腰围=身高 X 0.34 ( 如:身高160cm的标准腰围=160cm X 0.34=54.4cm )

  臀围=身高 X 0.542 ( 如:身高160cm的标准臀围=160cm X 0.542=86.72cm )

  美丽的身体人人都有,只是巧妙之处各有不同,所以所谓的标准身材并不是只强调高与瘦。简单地说,如果从头到脚是匀称的,不管多高,只要头部太大,就会造成整体上的不谐调;而如果你的身高只有150cm,但脸形大小合适、身材匀称,那就算是个比例标准的模特哦!

  依据下列步骤可以检测自己的身材。

  一、身材比例的计算步骤

  1. 判断脸形、头长:把头发全部往后梳起,抓起马尾,让脸部的轮廓线露出来,判定自己的脸形,再拿尺子由头顶到下巴(以光头的比例为准)测量一下脸的长度。

  2. 测量身高:量身高,要把头发压平、身体挺直才够准确。

  3. 计算比例:身高÷头长 = 头身(这就是所谓的身高比例标准)。

  例如:你身高159cm,头长20cm,那么159(身高)÷20(头长)=7.59(头身),四舍五入后,你可是标准的8头身哦!

  二、 标准三围的参考尺寸

  标准三围的尺寸可参考表1:

  表1

  身高 170cm 164cm 158cm 152cm

  胸围 88cm 86cm 84cm 80cm

  腰围 68cm 66cm 64cm 62cm

  臀围 94cm 90cm 86cm 82cm

  (注:1英寸=2.54cm)

  三、新时尚公式

  标准体重(kg)=(身高-100cm)×0.9

  标准臀围(cm)= 身高(cm)×0.54

  标准胸围(cm)= 身高(cm)×0.53

  标准腰围(cm)= 身高(cm)×0.37

  标准大腿长(cm)= 身高(cm)×0.3

  标准小腿长(cm)= 身高(cm)×0.26

“腰围”新闻


日本靠限制腰围节约医疗费

  如今在日本,肥胖人士到处受歧视,并且升迁可能性也大大减小。苗条已不仅仅是个时尚话题,而且成了涉及法律、职场的问题。日本政府已立法规定,腰围值超标者必须减肥,减肥不成功将接受健康教育,屡教不改者自动离职。

  立法限制腰围

  当人们还在谈论欧美有人因超重丢工作时,日本政府已警觉地开始测量国人的腰围。日本的法律规定:地方政府和企业每年为雇员进行体检时,必须严格检查年龄在40岁至75岁之间员工的腰围:男性腰围不得超过33.5英寸(85厘米),女性腰围不得超过35.4英寸(90厘米)。这一数字与国际糖尿病联合会2005年出台的鉴别是否存在健康隐患的腰围上限相同。

  日本政府将国民瘦身计划的目标定为:4年内使超重人口减少一成,7年内减少14%。按照厚生劳动省制定的相关规定,腰围超标者必须检查血糖、血压、血脂,若其中一项不合格,将被列入代谢综合征(metabolic syndrome)危险人群,两项不合格则为代谢综合征患者。这些人须在3个月内自行减肥;若减肥失败,必须接受饮食控制教育;再过6个月仍然超重,则要接受再教育,或自行离职。

  政府还将对推动雇员减肥不力的地方政府或私人企业处以罚款。厚生劳动省认为,这一新规定将有效控制中风、糖尿病等疾病的蔓延,而且能够减少国家为公共医疗保险制度支付的费用。

  日本兴起瘦腰运动

  政府有关腰围的新标准出台后,地方政府和私人企业开始组织国民实施腰围检查,一场轰轰烈烈的瘦腰减肥运动在各地展开。这使得“metabo”一词在日本开始流行,它是日本人给“代谢综合征”取的别称。在尼崎市一家体育馆内,数十名日本居民一边挥汗如雨地做运动,一边高唱《再见metabo!》:“拜拜,metabo,让我们一起去体检;拜拜,metabo,不要等到生病时……”

  松下电器“员工医疗保险联盟”的医生孤本吉国说,“肥胖”、“超重”这些词给人以负面印象,而必用metabo这个字眼,有助于肥胖人士减肥。去年夏天,体重107公斤、身高174厘米的30岁员工井上明尾,被松下公司医生警告应减肥和服用降压药。在适当节食后,井上的体重减到82公斤,但腰围还是超出政府标准1英寸(2.5厘米)。

  政府新规定出台后,松下公司不仅要为在职员工测量腰围,还要为员工家属以及退休员工测量。为加大检测力度,公司还开始向员工派出“metabo测量”毛巾以便他们在家测量。公司护士茂野吉说:“没有人愿意被列入metabo行列。这一行动将像反对吸烟运动一样取得良好效果。如今烟民会给人不好的印象。”

  按照规定,像松下这样的私人公司必须至少为80%的员工测量腰围,并确保10%的代谢综合征患者在2012年之前成功减肥,14%的代谢综合征患者在2015年之前成功减肥。日本电气公司(NEC)已表示,若无法完成上述目标,NEC将承担1900万美元的罚款。为此,公司决定将“代谢综合征”扼杀在摇篮中,即为30岁以上的员工进行腰围测量,并出资对员工家属进行健康教育。

  有人认为腰围标准太苛刻

  目前,日本已进入老龄化社会,政府向国民腰围“宣战”可减少因老龄化而节节攀升的医疗费。日本“全民保险”医疗保险制度使日本绝大多数人看得起病。根据有关规定,日本国民和在日本居住一年以上的外国人,都要加入国民健康保险,交一定数额的保险费,领取国民健康保险证。有病到医院就医,交30%医疗费即可,剩下的70%由医院和居民所在的地方政府结算。

  不过,也有批评者认为,政府设定的腰围标准值太过苛刻,尤其是男性腰围。照此标准,一半以上的日本男性将要被列入超重行列。如果有人为减去腰上赘肉而过度用药,将造成医疗费不减反增。

  现年73岁的玩具店老板永田谦三说,腰围粗细是他自己的事,他不会理睬当局要求他去量腰围的通知。永田说,他的腰围是32.5英寸(82.5厘米),远低于国家标准。因此,当政府第二次通知他去测量时,他仍表示:“我不打算去,这不关我的事。”